2))Later in the October 10 CBS broadcast, Bob Schieffer traveled to Ohio's
6th CD which encompasses the southern part of the Buckeye state. For the
House seat, Republican freshman Frank Cremeans faces his 1994 opponent,
Democrat Ted Strickland. Schieffer stated as fact that the Republican
House shut the government down, ignoring the at least equal role of the
President in refusing to sign continuing resolutions or appropriation
bills.

Here's the second
half of the story:

Schieffer:
"Now the two are back for a re-match that typifies the predicament
many Republican freshmen are finding. The revolution and its talk of
changing things like Medicare backfired with some voters. Just ask the
Republican county chairman here."
Roger Bennett, Clinton County Republican Chairman: "I think they've
lost confidence in Newt Gingrich."
Schieffer: "Remember, he's the Republican, not the Democratic
chairman. Why is that? Did you just go too far?"
Bennett: "I think he went too far and I think if you make a mistake
you back up and say, 'darn it I made a mistake,' and you go back and do it
over again the right way."
Schieffer: "Where did he make the mistake? In shutting down the
government."
Bennett: "I think that is the big thing because it involved all the
older people They were really concerned. It scared the Dickens out of
them."

Having established the GOP as the culprits for the shutdown, Schieffer
concluded by endorsing the Democratic candidate's view that House
Republicans are extremists:
Schieffer: "One reason Republican Cremeans, a Gingrich stalwart in
Washington, stresses the local angle here. Is your opponent running
against Newt Gingrich or is he running against you. Cremeans: "Well,
you'd have to ask him that. What I've tried to do is represent the
district."
Schieffer: "For sure, his opponent promises the same. He's learned a
lesson too."
Strickland: "And that lesson is that people want moderation and when
extremes are presented, whether they be from the left or from the right, I
think people have a tendency to turn away from that."
Schieffer: "Obvious perhaps, but as Fall comes to the heartland and
the election draws near, dozens of Republican freshmen are running scared,
wondering if it's a lesson they learned in time. Bob Schieffer, CBS News,
Chillicothe Ohio."

3) After the 1992 VP debate, both ABC's World News Tonight and CNN's
Inside Politics ran fact checking stories which were dominating by
corrections of Dan Quayle. This year, The Washington Post ran a piece
October 10 citing errors made by Kemp and Gore. The Post identified five
errors made by Gore. But, this year neither ABC or CNN ran a reality check
piece.

Of course, you
can't always trust the fact checkers. Post reporter Michael Weisskopf
offered this "correction" on Kemp: "Kemp...defended the tax
proposal by arguing that every tax cut in the 20th century has produced
higher government revenue. But many economists disagree. The huge Reagan
tax cut in 1981 resulted in a tripling of the budget deficit over a dozen
years."

Talk about apples
and oranges. Taxes were cut, but as the numbers show, tax revenue grew
faster than inflation in the 1980s. Spending soared even faster, leading
to higher deficits.

4) Speaking of Reagan bashing, MRC associate editor Tim Graham caught some
in Tuesday night's PBS Frontline special, The '96 Choice. Actress Blair
Brown, who narrated the show, stated: "By 1985, Reagan's economics
had plunged the country into debt. Dole's all-out fight to lower the
deficit became the defining battle of his career."

5) With several presidential biographers as guests, on Thursday's (October
10) MSNBC InterNight Bryant Gumbel explored presidential character. Much
of the show was devoted to defending Bill Clinton's character. Here are a
few of Gumbel's questions:

- Talking
about Clinton, Gumbel asked The Washington Post's David Maraniss:
"In the first two years this is a man who tried his best to balance
the budget, to reform health care, to fight for gay rights, to support
personal freedoms. Couldn't those be considered doing the right things,
evidence of true character?"

He tried to
balanced the budget?

- "Do any
of those things of which Bill Clinton is charged, when it comes to
character, have much to do with governing effectively, or with
leading?"

Having failed to
mention anything about lying and Clinton, Gumbel moved on to Reagan.

- To Reagan
biographer Lou Cannon: "Lou, I know you feel as if Reagan had few,
if any, character flaws. But let me ask you this. When one sidesteps, or
refuses to acknowledge the consequences of their policies or actions,
why shouldn't that be viewed as a character flaw? Or when one lies. For
example, let me roll a clip and then we'll come back. This one deals
with Iran-Contra."

- A segment
later, he returned to Reagan, asking Cannon if it was true "that
while he appeared to be empathetic, his policies caused enormous
suffering for those who were least able to afford it?"

Brian Williams:
"I was watching his acceptance speech in San Diego, which was
really the speech of his life, it was a very dramatic event. And I'm
standing there with one of our younger producers at MSNBC. She's 24 or
something and I said 'What do you think?' She said, 'You know, he scares
me.' And I said, 'What do you mean he scares you?' She said 'It doesn't
matter what he's trying to say, it doesn't matter what the speech says
or how well he's doing it, all I hear him say is GET OFF MY LAWN! I have
this mental image. I'm playing with my friends on the rich guy's lawn
and the guy comes to the door, with his little pen, you know, and says
GET OFF MY LAWN!'"

Talk about image over substance. And not much sensitivity toward the
disabled.

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